The National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD) is a non-profit voluntary
health agency dedicated to the identification, treatment and cure of rare “orphan”
diseases. NORD represents more than 25 million Americans with over 6,000 rare
“orphan diseases.” Under the federal Orphan Drug Act of 1983,
a rare disease is defined as a health condition that affects fewer than 200,000
Americans. Because each disease affects a small number of people, there generally
is little commercial interest in performing research or developing new products
to diagnose or treat these diseases. Moreover, academic scientists believe it
is easier for them to obtain government research grants for the study of more
prevalent diseases, so they sometimes avoid applying for grants to study rare
diseases.
Purpose
NORD's mission is to promote the diagnosis, treatment, and cure of rare disorders
through programs of education, research, advocacy, and service to families and
health professionals. NORD's Clinical Research Grant Program,
which includes both general and disease-specific grants, provides small “seed
money” grants to academic scientists studying new treatments or diagnostic
tests for rare diseases. The small clinical trials supported by NORD's research
grants provide preliminary data indicating that a treatment (drug, device, or
medical food) may be safe and effective when used for a larger number of patients.
Researchers can then use the preliminary data to apply for larger multi-year
government grants, or to attract a commercial sponsor who will manufacture the
orphan product and get it approved for marketing by the Food & Drug Administration
(FDA). When very little is known about a rare disease NORD research grants may
support more basic research studying possible treatments that are not yet ready
for human testing. NORD's research review guidelines follow those of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), and administrative costs are kept to a minimum.
Donating For Rare Disease Research
Donors may contribute to NORD's General Research Fund, or they
may target their donation to research on a specific disorder.
Donations made to NORD's General Research Fund will be spent
on medical research and related activities that encourage increased research,
but are not restricted to one disease. NORD encourages potential donors interested
in disease-specific research to conduct fundraising
efforts so that a sufficient amount of money is made available, within a reasonable
period of time, to attract the highest quality research proposals. Medical research
is expensive so a minimum of $35,000 is required to fund one grant. When this
target amount is reached, NORD begins the process of issuing a request for research
proposals.
In the past, when donors gave small sums restricted to research on specified
diseases, the gifts languished unspent for several years because sums were too
low to support medical research. Therefore, NORD's Board of Directors decided
if the funds donated to a specific disease do not reach the following amounts
within the specified period of time, the funds will be transferred to the following:
- If the total of donated funds for research on a specific disease is less
than $1,000 after two years without significant donations, the fund will
be transferred to general research and related activities.
- If the total of donated funds for research on a specific disease is more
than $1,000 but less than $5,000 after four years, the money
will be transferred to research on related diseases. (e.g., neurological,
metabolic, connective tissue diseases, etc.)
- If the total of donated funds for research on a specific disease is more
than $5,000 but less than $10,000 after six years, the money
will be transferred to research on related diseases.
- If the total of donated funds for research on a specific disease is more
than $10,000 but less than $15,000 after eight years, the money
will be transferred to research on related diseases.
- If the total of donated funds for research on a specific disease is
less than $25,000 in ten years, the money will be transferred to research
on related diseases.
Exceptions can be made if NORD sees continued donor activity for a specific
disease, indicating that there is a determined effort to reach the minimum $35,000
goal, in a reasonable period of time. In many instances, families will launch
fundraising campaigns in their communities that raise several hundred dollars
at a time. NORD encourages these activities and recognizes that it can take
several years to reach the necessary sum that triggers a request for research
proposals.
Costs
A minimum of $35,000 is required to trigger a request for research proposals.
Out of each grant awarded between $30,000 and $50,000, NORD uses only $5,000
to cover the administrative expenses and direct costs of initiating a request
for proposals (RFP). Grants awarded over $50,000 use 10% for administrative
expenses. Costs of the RFP include advertisements in leading medical journals
and a mailing to every university-affiliated hospital and medical school in
the United States. A search for researchers who have published journal articles
about a specific disease in the last 2 – 5 years is conducted in order
to reach the most expert scientists. Additionally, research institutions in
Canada and Europe may also be notified of the RFP.
Each research proposal is reviewed by NORD's Medical Advisory Committee, which
recommends funding for the highest scored proposals. After the grant is awarded,
NORD monitors the progress of the research, processing biannual reports to NORD's
Medical Advisory Committee. Any restricted funds that are not spent during a
grant cycle are returned to the restricted research fund for that disease. Administrative
fees are not taken until a grant has been awarded, regardless of the number
of RFP"s issued.
Grant Cycles
Requests for proposals (RFP's) are issued on a cyclical basis. Adequate
funds must be in place before preparations to initiate a research grant begin.
Therefore, to maximize the full benefits of international advertisements and
wide circulation of the funding opportunity, donors should understand that it
takes several months after an RFP is issued, until the grant is awarded and
actual research can begin. The outline below depicts a typical cycle:
| October – January |
Prepare to initiate Request For Proposals (RFP) |
| January – March |
Issue RFP |
| April/May |
Deadline for preliminary proposals. NORD Medical Advisory Committee narrows
applicants and invites finalists to submit detailed proposals. |
| July/August |
Deadline for full proposals from finalists. Peer review of final proposals. |
| September/October |
Winners selected and awards announced. |
Selection of Grantees
The initial Request for Proposals asks scientists to submit a brief description
(abstract) of their proposed research project along with their professional
qualifications and a draft budget. Once that information is received, NORD's
Medical Advisory Committee (composed of leading academic scientific experts)
reviews all of the applications and selects finalists. The finalists are invited
to submit a full grant application describing their proposed project in detail.
NORD's Medical Advisory Committee then reviews the full grant applications (peer
review) and ranks them through a scoring system. The highest scoring grant applications
are recommended for funding to NORD's Board of Directors who votes on the final
grant awards.
Depending upon the amount of money available for grants, one or more applications
are chosen by the MAC for the grant award. Interim progress and budget reports
are required every six months from the investigators, which are also reviewed
and approved by NORD's Medical Advisory Committee. It is possible, however,
that some researchers may require more or less time for completion of their
research project.
NORD's grant review process is based on the same peer review system utilized
by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Scoring of grants is done individually
by each medical expert, and scores are added together to determine the final
ranking of each proposal. Any reviewer with a conflict of interest is excused
from voting on a specific proposal. It is not possible for donors to
signify how they want their donations spent (e.g., on a genetic test rather
than development of a treatment), or which researcher should be funded.
The grant selection process is unbiased and independent; awards are based solely
on scientific merit. Only the best research projects will be funded.
By encouraging research applicants to compete against each other on an international
basis, NORD's Research Grant Program funds only the best proposals that are
most likely to result in research breakthroughs that can be applied to the diagnosis
or treatment of people with rare disorders.
All research contributions are restricted by NORD and can be used for no other
purpose without the donor's permission. Donations to NORD's Research Fund are
tax deductible under IRS law. Interest cannot be accrued on gifts to the research
Fund. Accumulated amounts for each disease-specific fund over $1,000 are published
in NORD's newsletters, Orphan Disease Update.
If you are interested in initiating a research grant, or making a donation
to NORD's Clinical Research Grant Program, please contact Nicole Woodage,
Research Grant Administrator, by email: nwoodage
@rarediseases.org
or by calling 203-744-0100.
Your gifts enable NORD to continue its vitally important
research program aimed at promoting the diagnosis, new treatments, and cures
for rare "orphan diseases."